Shain v. Goodwin

46 F. 564, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedMay 4, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 F. 564 (Shain v. Goodwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shain v. Goodwin, 46 F. 564, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315 (circtndca 1891).

Opinion

Hawley, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff to recover the amount due upon two certain promissory notes, each for the sum of $1,500, one dated July 5,1884,the other October 5,1884, and each made payable within 90 days after date. The notes were signed by the defendant, and made payable to Edmond Morris, or order. Each note is indorsed as follows: “Edmond Morris: Without recourse, pay to Joe. E. Shain, or order. T. H. Cunningham.” The cause was tried before the [565]*565court without a jury. Plaintiff offered the notes in evidence, and then rested. Defendant offered in evidence the deposition of Edmond Morris, taken on behalf of the plaintiff. This was all the testimony taken in the case.

It is contended by the defendant that the notes were given for a gambling debt, and that the burden of proof is upon the holder of these notes to show that he received them before maturity for a valuable consideration, and without notice of any illegality. 'With reference to the consideration of these notes, Morris testified upon his direct examination as follows:

“Question. What was the consideration for these notes, Mr. Morris? Answer. Well, it was a debt that he owed me. Q. IIow was that debt evidenced, if evidenced at all, before these notes were given? A. Well, it was some money that I winned from him. I had a gambling transaction with him, as you usually call it.”

And upon cross-examination as follows:

“Question. What was the consideration for these notes? Was it that gambling? Answer. It was money that he had winned from me, and Iliad winned a portion of it back, and he gave me these notes in satisfaction of the debt.’5

The facts in relation to the gambling between these parties is given by Morris as follows:

“Question. Now, you have stated that the notes sued upon in this action were for money you won from Goodwin in a gambling transaction. State what that gambling transaction was? Answer. Well, about the 3d of July, in the morning or night, him and me were gambling, that night and the night before, and he had beaten me out of eighteen hundred dollars dealing faro, and two hundred'dollars playing casino, and I paid him his money, and he went away, — paid him two thousand dollars, — and after he went away I happened to go over to the Palace Hotel, an hour after this transaction took place, as near as I can recollect, and he was in the bar-room of the Palace Hotel, and we naturally began to gamble again, and we shook dice, — shook one dice, — for two hundred dollars a shake, and it resulted, eventually, of my beating him out of five thousand dollars.”

It appears that before defendant signed the notes in question he had given due-bills for the amount, and these due-bills were surrendered, and the notes executed in proper and due form. The testimony of Morris relating to the settlement is as follows:

“ Question. After winning this five thousand dollars, state how it was settled. Answer. It was settled by his paying me one thousand dollars in cash. That morning he paid me one thousand dollars in cash, and he said he would see me the next day, and settle the balance. The next day I didn’t see him, which was the 3d of July, and on the 4th of July he hunted me up himself, and gave me these notes, and asked me to take these notes the way that he wanted it done.”

Section 330, Pen. Code Cal., provides that “any banking game played with cards, dice, or any device, for money, * * * is punishable by fine.” Section 1667 of the Civil Code provides that a contract which is contrary to the policy of express law, or “contrary to good morals,” is not lawful.

[566]*566Conceding, as claimed by plaintiff, that the supreme court of California in Corbin v. Wachhorst,, 73 Cal. 411, 15 Pac. Rep. 22, decided that throwing dice for money is not unlawful, and was not such a game as was forbidden by any statute of this state, still the question remains whether, upon the facts of this case, which are dissimilar in several essential features from Corbin v. Wachhorst, the contract between the parties to throw dice for money, upon which the consideration of the notes is based, was not unlawful under the provisions of the Civil Code. In Corbin v. Wachhorst the parties plaintiff and defendant, with two other persons, played at the game of throwing dice, and during the game defendant borrowed small amounts of money, which in the aggregate amounted to $350, and when the game closed the defendant signed a note, and delivered it to plaintiff, for the amount thus borrowed. The decision sustaining the validity of the note thus given is based upon the facts that the money was loaned in good faith, and that it did not appear that the plaintiff won any of the money, or that defendant lost any of it, in the dice throwing. The court said:

“Ho part of the consideration of the note was money won by plaintiff from defendant. It was all for money loaned by plaintiff to defendant, which plaintiff took out of his money drawer and his safe. Plaintiff himself was not winner at the game, and of the players it does not appear who was winner or loser when the game ended, about ten o’clock. * * * Admitting that the plaintiff knew the money which the defendant borrowed from him was to be used afterwards in the game of dice throwing, he did not loan it with a view to have it used in a game declared by law to be unlawful, and was entitled to recover on a contract, the consideration of which was money loaned. It is claimed that the Civil Code provides that a contract is not lawful when it is ‘ contrary to good morals.’ Conceding, without deciding; that anote given for money lost at dice throwing is a contract based upon ‘an immoral consideration,’ and still the defendant was liable on the note for he borrowed money from the plaintiff, and gave the note therefor, and, if the defendant used it in playing at dice throwing, as he did, and the plaintiff knew it would be so used when he loaned it, and the plaintiff, as he did, loaned the money in good faith to the defendant, who knew' what he was doing, and the plaintiff is not shown to have won the money for which the note was given, nor the defendant to have lost it, in the game, the latter is liable on the note. Poorman v. Mills, 39 Cal. 345. For non constat from the findings but what the money loaned in good faith to a man competent to contract may still be in his possession, or have been used for some other purpose to his advantage.”

In this case it clearly appears that the contract between the defendant and Morris, to whom the notes were given, was to play at the game for $200 per shake, and the defendant lost and Morris won the full amount of money for which the notes were given. This was the only consideration for the notes. The contract was “contrary to good morals,” and therefore illegal, under the express provisions of the Code.

In Scott v. Courtney, (7 Nev. 421,) which was an action to recover money won by plaintiff and lost by defendant at the game of faro, a game licensed by the statute of that state, the court held that the action could not be maintained. In the opinion the court said: •

[567]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ham v. Grapeland Irrigation District
158 P. 207 (California Supreme Court, 1916)
Union Collection Co. v. Buckman
88 P. 708 (California Supreme Court, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F. 564, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shain-v-goodwin-circtndca-1891.